Solar extreme ultraviolet irradiance measurements during solar cycle 22

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Abstract

The solar extreme ultraviolet (EUV) irradiance, the dominant global energy source for Earth's atmosphere above 100 km, is not known accurately enough for many studies of the upper atmosphere. During the absence of direct solar EUV irradiance measurements from satellites, the solar EUV irradiance is often estimated at the 30-50% uncertainty level using both proxies of the solar irradiance and earlier solar EUV irradiance measurements, primarily from the Air Force Geophysics Laboratory (now Phillips Laboratory) rockets and Atmospheric Explorer (AE) instruments. Our sounding rocket measurements during solar cycle 22 include solar EUV irradiances below 120 nm with 0.2 nm spectral resolution, far ultraviolet (FUV) airglow spectra below 160 nm, and solar soft X-ray (XUV) images at 17.5 nm. Compared to the earlier observations, these rocket experiments provide a more accurate absolute measurement of the solar EUV irradiance, because these instruments are calibrated at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) with a radiometric uncertainty of about 8%. These more accurate sounding-rocket measurements suggest revisions of the previous reference AE-E spectra by as much as a factor of 2 at some wavelengths. Our sounding-rocket flights during the past several years (1988-1994) also provide information about solar EUV variability during solar cycle 22.

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Woods, T. N., Rottman, G. J., Bailey, S. M., Solomon, S. C., & Worden, J. R. (1998). Solar extreme ultraviolet irradiance measurements during solar cycle 22. Solar Physics, 177(1–2), 133–146. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-5000-2_10

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